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#61
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On Jun 3, 12:22*am, "Stephen!" wrote:
a wrote in news:ad2f4ec2-e6ff-4630-a104-cc9246ac9f22 @j12g2000pri.googlegroups.com: Recent studies of midair collisions involving aircraft by the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) determined that: * * Most of the aircraft involved in collisions are engaged in recreational flying, not on any type of flight plan. * * Most midair collisions occur in VFR weather conditions during weekend daylight hours. * * The vast majority of accidents occurred at or near uncontrolled airports and at altitudes below 1000 feet. * * Pilots of all experience levels were involved in midair collisions, from pilots on their first solo ride, to 20,000-hour veterans. * * Flight instructors were on board the aircraft 37 percent of the accidents in the study. * * Most collisions occur in daylight with visibility greater than 3 miles. Here's how you can contribute to professional flying and reduce the odds of becoming involved in a midair collision. * Lessee... *According to the "statistics", your best bet of successfully accomplishing a flight without a mid-air collision is to: *Fly only at night in low visibilty conditions, away from any airport, above 1000 feet, with a flight instructor, and only during week days... * Damn, how I love statistics. -- RCOS #7 IBA# 11465http://imagesdesavions.com On a personal note, I tend to feel 'safer' when the weather is worse than marginal VFR and the kids (sorry for the demeaning phraseology) stay on the ground. Paying attention to the information I offered may cause some to choose to fly differently than the way they were taught when around uncontrolled airports, or for that matter in other phases of flight as well. I've learned from other posters here and incorporated some of their ideas into my own flying, and made note of my 'deviations' from standard techniques and think some pilots have adopted some of them for their own use. The sort of discussion about what might be safer flying is a worthy use of RAP but the density of interesting information is pretty low. |
#62
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Mxsmanic wrote
When was A-N retired? I have trouble just finding information about it; I guess nobody who uses computers is old enough to remember it. Well...it was properly called "radio range" and my Navy Advanced Training Instrument check ride in the S-2F Tracker included a radio-range orientation followed by a radio-range approach to the Alice, TX (ALI) airport. This was followed by a radio-range missed approach with one engine feathered. Then a single-engine mdf (manual direction finding) approach...yes, using the loop mode and manually rotating it to find the null. This was all way back in 1959. Not only do I use computers, I built my first one from a hand full of parts back in the MITS Altair days, probably before you were born, 1975 as I recall. Bob Moore |
#63
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Mike Adams wrote:
Mxsmanic wrote: When was A-N retired? I have trouble just finding information about it; I guess nobody who uses computers is old enough to remember it. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Low_frequency_radio_range Before there were radio ranges, there were light ranges. And the terminal beacon on a light range is still there for you to see, on a tower near a runway. Brian W |
#64
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On Jun 3, 5:34*pm, a wrote:
On a personal note, I tend to feel 'safer' when the weather is worse than marginal VFR and the kids *(sorry for the demeaning phraseology) stay on the ground. Yep, usually it's those days where you are the only "november" call sign on frequency :-) Actually less chatter on the radio as well in my experiences. |
#65
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On Sun, 30 May 2010 13:40:18 +0100, wrote:
Mxsmanic wrote: VOR-DME writes: The good news, for all involved, is that Microsoft no longer supports MSFS, so the advantages and difficulties that those of us flying the real system face will be completely lost on MSFS users like MX, hopelessly lost in a 1980's world of air traffic regulation. Serious simmers do not use the built-in ATC of MSFS. And the product is still supported, although it is no longer under active development. Were it to disappear, there are alternatives such as X-Plane (not a pretty alternative, I'll grant). But none of this has anything to do with ADS-B. Which means as a MSFS gamer you have no clue what ADS-B is, how it works, or what the next step in the system is. The poor gamers don't know what they don't know. -- http://www.mologogo.com/ |
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